<p>The US government on Wednesday said it had approved the sale of $1 billion worth of advanced air-to-ground missiles to Taiwan as the island tries to shore up its defences against China.</p>.<p>The State Department said it had agreed to sell 135 of the precision-guided, air-launched AGM-84H SLAM-ER cruise missiles.</p>.<p>Also approved was the sale of six MS-110 air reconnaissance pods and 11 M142 mobile light rocket launchers, taking the value of the three arms packages to $1.8 billion.</p>.<p>The SLAM-ER missiles will help Taiwan "meet current and future threats as it provides all-weather, day and night, precision attack capabilities against both moving and stationary targets" on the ground or ocean surface, a statement said.</p>.<p>Taiwan's defence ministry said the weapons would help it "build credible combat capabilities and strengthen the development of asymmetric warfare".</p>.<p>The sales announced Wednesday did not include the MQ9 Reaper combat drones, which Taiwan has also reportedly requested.</p>.<p>Democratic and self-ruled Taiwan lives under constant threat of invasion by authoritarian China, whose leaders view the island as part of their territory.</p>.<p>They have vowed to one day seize the island, by force if necessary.</p>.<p>China's military defence spending dwarves Taipei's and while the US does sell Taiwan weapons, it is not bound by a defence treaty as it is with Japan, South Korea and the Philippines.</p>.<p>Beijing has ramped up diplomatic and military pressure on Taiwan since the 2016 election of President Tsai Ing-wen, who views the island as a de facto sovereign nation and not part of "one China".</p>.<p>The last year has seen a dramatic increase in incursions by Chinese fighter jets and bombers into Taiwan's defence zone while state media has ramped up sabre-rattling.</p>.<p>Last week, Beijing released footage of a military exercise simulating an invasion of a Taiwan-like territory featuring missile strikes and amphibious landings.</p>.<p>The PLA also recently released a propaganda video simulating an attack on Taiwan that included missile strikes on US military bases in Guam.</p>.<p>While Taiwan has for decades fallen back on an implicit US security guarantee, Washington has urged it to strengthen its own capabilities to resist invasion.</p>.<p>"Whether there's an amphibious landing, a missile attack, a grey zone-type (hybrid) operation, they really need to fortify themselves," President Donald Trump's National Security Advisor Robert O'Brien said last week.</p>.<p>"Taiwan needs to start looking at some asymmetric and anti-access area denial strategies... and really fortify itself in a manner that would deter the Chinese from any sort of amphibious invasion or even a grey zone operation against them," he said.</p>.<p>The previous three US administrations were wary of big-ticket arms deals with Taipei for fear of incurring Beijing's wrath.</p>.<p>President Trump has been much less squeamish about such sales, but his commitment to Taiwan's defence has been called into question by his "America First" doctrine and on-again, off-again affection for Chinese leader Xi Jinping.</p>
<p>The US government on Wednesday said it had approved the sale of $1 billion worth of advanced air-to-ground missiles to Taiwan as the island tries to shore up its defences against China.</p>.<p>The State Department said it had agreed to sell 135 of the precision-guided, air-launched AGM-84H SLAM-ER cruise missiles.</p>.<p>Also approved was the sale of six MS-110 air reconnaissance pods and 11 M142 mobile light rocket launchers, taking the value of the three arms packages to $1.8 billion.</p>.<p>The SLAM-ER missiles will help Taiwan "meet current and future threats as it provides all-weather, day and night, precision attack capabilities against both moving and stationary targets" on the ground or ocean surface, a statement said.</p>.<p>Taiwan's defence ministry said the weapons would help it "build credible combat capabilities and strengthen the development of asymmetric warfare".</p>.<p>The sales announced Wednesday did not include the MQ9 Reaper combat drones, which Taiwan has also reportedly requested.</p>.<p>Democratic and self-ruled Taiwan lives under constant threat of invasion by authoritarian China, whose leaders view the island as part of their territory.</p>.<p>They have vowed to one day seize the island, by force if necessary.</p>.<p>China's military defence spending dwarves Taipei's and while the US does sell Taiwan weapons, it is not bound by a defence treaty as it is with Japan, South Korea and the Philippines.</p>.<p>Beijing has ramped up diplomatic and military pressure on Taiwan since the 2016 election of President Tsai Ing-wen, who views the island as a de facto sovereign nation and not part of "one China".</p>.<p>The last year has seen a dramatic increase in incursions by Chinese fighter jets and bombers into Taiwan's defence zone while state media has ramped up sabre-rattling.</p>.<p>Last week, Beijing released footage of a military exercise simulating an invasion of a Taiwan-like territory featuring missile strikes and amphibious landings.</p>.<p>The PLA also recently released a propaganda video simulating an attack on Taiwan that included missile strikes on US military bases in Guam.</p>.<p>While Taiwan has for decades fallen back on an implicit US security guarantee, Washington has urged it to strengthen its own capabilities to resist invasion.</p>.<p>"Whether there's an amphibious landing, a missile attack, a grey zone-type (hybrid) operation, they really need to fortify themselves," President Donald Trump's National Security Advisor Robert O'Brien said last week.</p>.<p>"Taiwan needs to start looking at some asymmetric and anti-access area denial strategies... and really fortify itself in a manner that would deter the Chinese from any sort of amphibious invasion or even a grey zone operation against them," he said.</p>.<p>The previous three US administrations were wary of big-ticket arms deals with Taipei for fear of incurring Beijing's wrath.</p>.<p>President Trump has been much less squeamish about such sales, but his commitment to Taiwan's defence has been called into question by his "America First" doctrine and on-again, off-again affection for Chinese leader Xi Jinping.</p>